"m_ridzon" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:5B3F64B5-9CBD-4FB1-8517-(E-Mail Removed)...
> About 5 years ago, I completely reformatted my harddrive and partitioned
> the
> drives. C drive holds the operating system and is 10Gb. D drive holds my
> program files and is 10Gb. E and F drives just hold ordinary user files
> and
> have lots of free space. C drive has only 100Mb of free space remaining
> and
> I need to correct it because it's slowing the PC down. I'm really good
> about
> regularly cleaning my PC. I've run disk cleanup on C drive recently and
> cleaned out old System Restore's as well; I've cleaned out Temp files and
> even ran the File Compressor on the drive. I uninstalled a few programs
> that
> I don't use that much (the remaining prog's are used often). Months back,
> I
> took all of the WinXP Update Uninstall files and relocated them to F drive
> (they were taking up a lot of room). I've concluded that C drive has been
> filled up by software installations and downloaded software updates over
> the
> years that can't be removed without adversely affecting the computer's
> ability to run.
>
> The only way I know to fix this problem is to wipe the PC harddrive clean
> and reallocate the partition space, which means hours of time completely
> rebuilding the PC. I'd rather not do that. Is there a way to go into the
> PC
> and take some free space from E and F drive and reallocate it to C drive?
> Or
> is it possible to buy another harddrive and somehow install it in such a
> way
> that it is piggy-backed onto C drive? Or can an external harddrive help
> me
> fix this in anyway?
>
> The computer has run great for years and still runs fine aside from the
> fact
> that it recently slowed up because of limited space on C drive. I'd
> prefer
> not to reformat it. There's no reason to reformat the harddrive other
> than
> this space problem. Any input?
>
> OS: WinXP SP3
>
> Thanks,
> M Ridzon
Install a large second internal IDE drive.. partition it, allocating 30gb
for what will become the primary partition.. use Acronis Disk Director or
similar utility to clone the OS to the new drive.. re-install all programs
which now reside on D, but install them to C..
Now go to Disk Management and partition and format the rest of the new
drive. Move all data to the new drive, and then format and repartition the
older drive into more usable sizes..
--
Mike Hall - MVP Windows Experience
http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/